PORTLAND, Maine, Dec. 4, 2006

Scientist: Asteroid To Return In 2036

But Researchers Say KW4, Which Passed By Earth In 1999, Isn't Expected To Hit Us For At Least 1,000 Years

  •  (CBS/AP)

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(AP)  A Maine scientist who uses radar to peer at objects in space says an asteroid that passed by Earth five years ago is due for a return visit to the planetary neighborhood in 2036.

But Chris Magri, an associate professor of physics at the University of Maine at Farmington, says there's no need for panic. By that time, Magri says, scientists may have figured out a way to send the muffin-shaped asteroid, known as KW4, somewhere else.

Magri joined a team of more than a dozen other scientists who calculated that the asteroid will not actually hit the Earth for at least 1,000 years.

The research on KW4 was led by Steven Ostro, an astronomer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and Daniel Scheeres, associate professor of aerospace engineering at the University of Michigan.

Magri, Ostro and Scheeres are among the few scientists around the world who use radar to research the 800 known asteroids that are considered a potential threat because they come close to Earth.

Their research on KW4 was cover story for last week's Science magazine, published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

So far the scientists have studied about two dozen of the asteroids, but the examination of KW4 is the most complete to date. Discovered in 1999, it came within 2.9 million miles of Earth in May 2001, close enough to allow Magri and others on the team to study it.

"We know more about KW4 than any of the (other) potentially hazardous asteroids," said Ostro, who has worked with Magri for the past decade on asteroid research.

The team used a radar telescope in California, and the Arecibo radar telescope in Puerto Rico, the most powerful in the world. Radar imagery gives a much more detailed look at an asteroid than a conventional telescope can.

Magri ran highly complicated software that translated information from the radar into a three-dimensional representation of what KW4 looks like in motion.

KW4 is made up of a roughly one-mile-wide piece, called Alpha; and a smaller, roughly one-third-mile piece, named Beta, which revolves around Alpha as the moon orbits Earth.

Plotting the future path of an asteroid is not a simple matter. The technique draws on a half-dozen scientific disciplines, such as electrical engineering, radio science, geology and astronomy.

"It involves both very difficult observations and some very exotic theoretical work, so that there are not too many of us working in this area," said Ostro.

Magri said radar telescopes measure the asteroid's speed in the way radar guns help police catch speeders. It helps scientists gauge the orbit and the asteroid's future path, just as it's possible to accurately predict the future path of a pool ball for about five or six bounces.

But scientists can make predictions only for a period up to about 1,000 years. Beyond that, unpredictable factors such as the gravitational pull from planets make predictions much less accurate, Magri said.


©MMVI, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by antoniof123 December 5, 2006 12:57 PM EST
1,000 years and maybe it will hit us. I doubt that we will wait that long till we hit ourselves with our own form of mass destruction. On the bright side live in or around a large population and it will be over in an instance and you will not have to suffer.
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by cbse3 December 5, 2006 11:56 AM EST
mAYBE rf35 is on to something. So it comes down to who do we trust about what they telling us about earthly affairs such as global warming, critical shortages of natural resources like oil, metals, the dying ocean, global warming and a world population exploding. Extrapilate all of these factors and it adds up to either several wars or plauges or an astroid that will have to thin the human herd to keep a reasonable balance. After all, there is only a certain amount of earth that can support x amount of us
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by olebd December 5, 2006 10:36 AM EST
We'll all be wiped out in a nuclear war before this happens.
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by alphaa10-2009 December 5, 2006 6:13 AM EST
What is so amusing is scientists are driven to plot these flying fingers of doom ever so precisely-- but we haven't even a plan to make a plan to deal with them-- at least, yet.

However, the day will come when we will be able to track these objects centuries out (thank you, Newton)-- so, should a credible effort at asteroid control start now?
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by darkfyreaol December 5, 2006 2:34 AM EST
Here's an idea. Harness the asteroid and put it in a stable orbit around Earth. Use it for scientific purposes and vacation getaways. (I can see Virgin's new 'space plane' venture taking advantage of that!)
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by tiger_fairy9 December 4, 2006 9:11 PM EST
Pray to God to save your souls!!! Hehe. jk

Anyways...It actually would be interesting to see what kind of impact an astroid would have on the earth, why not let it hit us?

Anyone up for grabs?
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by syphlis December 4, 2006 7:07 PM EST
lol@rf35, i wish everyone was smart like you! ^^

seriously, i like your train of thought, i'm tired of waiting for the next plague or rapture, or nuclear terrorist attack, i mean, we NEED something to wipe out all those idiots in the southern and western hemispheres!!11!
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by syphlis December 4, 2006 6:59 PM EST
what we need this time is a pack of south african coal miners and a grizzled Patrick Swayze to fly out there with a nuke! wolverines 4ever!
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by rf35 December 4, 2006 6:41 PM EST
I think a good asteroid strike is just what humanity needs. Not a huge planet killer, just something big enough to topple civilization and "thin the herd." That would clean up the gene pool, too.
"That which does not kill us makes us stronger." Friedrich Nietzsche
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by newmacG5 December 4, 2006 5:00 PM EST
You last thing you want is a Bruce Willis macho type; any asteroid simply needs a gentle light deflective touch. No need for explosions or bushian star wars nonsense.
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by nothappyatall December 4, 2006 4:57 PM EST
"Isn't Expected To Hit Us For At Least 1,000 Years"

Oh well who gives a flying ***?? NONE of us will be here to be affected by it, we'll all be LONG dead and buried.
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by syphlis December 4, 2006 4:00 PM EST
SAVE US BRUCE WILLIS! THE END IS NEAR#!@!11
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by olebd December 4, 2006 3:50 PM EST
Well now, stuff like this really gives us a sense of how insignificant we are....as well as our squabbles around the globe.

We're just a bunch of ants spinning on a rock in a debris infested universe.

GROUP HUG!
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